American importers are actively looking for Georgian wine. Georgian producers want American importers. The two sides have almost no way to find each other.
There are thousands of licensed beverage importers in the United States. A meaningful number of them — particularly in the natural wine segment — are actively building or considering Georgian portfolios. They have heard about qvevri. They have read about amber wine. Their restaurant accounts are asking for something new. Georgia is on their radar.
On the other side, there are hundreds of serious Georgian wine producers who make extraordinary wine and have no US representation. They know their wine is good. They know the American market exists. They have no idea how to reach it.
A Georgian producer who emails a US importer cold — even a good importer, even with a good wine — is unlikely to get a serious response. Importers receive hundreds of unsolicited inquiries. Without context, without a warm introduction, without someone credible vouching for the producer, the email goes unanswered.
The same problem exists in reverse. An importer who wants to source Georgian wine can attend a trade fair, hire a consultant, or attempt to navigate the Tbilisi wine scene remotely. None of these approaches produce the kind of curated, relationship-based introductions that lead to long-term partnerships.
We are physically present in Tbilisi. We speak Georgian. We know the producers worth knowing. And we have relationships with US importers who are actively looking for Georgian wine. We are the bridge that currently does not exist at scale — a trusted party on both sides of a transaction that both sides want to complete but cannot find each other to close.
Whether you are a Georgian winemaker or an American importer, we can help.
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